[PATCH v3 0/4] clk: st: New always-on clock domain
Lee Jones
lee.jones at linaro.org
Fri Feb 27 13:49:41 PST 2015
On Fri, 27 Feb 2015, Robert Jarzmik wrote:
> Lee Jones <lee.jones at linaro.org> writes:
>
> > v2 => v3:
> > - Ensure DT actually reflects h/w
> > - i.e. Nodes should not contain a mishmash of different IP
> > blocks, but should identify related h/w. In the current
> > example we use interconnects
> > - Change naming from clkdomain to clk-always-on
> > - Place "do not abuse" warning in documentation
> >
> > v1 => v2:
> > - Turned the ST specific driver into a generic one
> >
> > Hardware can have a bunch of clocks which must not be turned off.
> > If drivers a) fail to obtain a reference to any of these or b) give
> > up a previously obtained reference during suspend, the common clk
> > framework will attempt to turn them off and the hardware will
> > subsequently die. The only way to recover from this failure is to
> > restart.
> >
> > To avoid either of these two scenarios from catastrophically
> > disabling the running system we have implemented a clock domain
> > where clocks are consumed and references are taken, thus preventing
> > them from being shut down by the framework.
>
> Hi Lee,
>
> I wonder why there is a need for a new clock when CLK_IGNORE_UNUSED does
> exist. What is the usecase that is covered by this patchset which is not used by
> CLK_IGNORE_UNUSED clock flag ?
>
> And if that reason exists, I'd like to find it in the commit message.
The problem is applying that flag in a generic way.
However, I guess you haven't seen this [1] yet?
[1] https://lkml.org/lkml/2015/2/27/548
--
Lee Jones
Linaro STMicroelectronics Landing Team Lead
Linaro.org │ Open source software for ARM SoCs
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